Results 101 to 110 of about 15,386 (267)
Low-Computation Oblivious Transfer Scheme for Private Information Retrieval
[[abstract]]The most efficient previous oblivious transfer schemes require 2t rounds of communication to obtain t secret messages. Its computational requirements and bandwidth consumption are quite demanding.
Huang, H. F. ; Chang, C. C.
core
ABSTRACT This article examines the “digital turn” in value chain due diligence, focusing on how emerging digital tools and technologies are reshaping the practice and politics of stakeholder engagement in transnational labor governance. As value chain legislation—most notably the EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD)—extends ...
Klaas Hendrik Eller, Antoine Duval
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT The rise of independent oversight of the accounting profession has attracted considerable research attention. Much of this research has studied how professional accounting bodies and the Big 4 firms have shaped the mandate and capabilities of independent oversight bodies.
Brendan O'Dwyer +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Oblivious Polynomial Evaluation and Oblivious Neural Learning
We study the problem of Oblivious Polynomial Evaluation (OPE), where one party has a polynomial P and the other party, with an input x, wants to learn P (x) in an oblivious way.
Yan-cheng Chang
core
Diagnostic validation of the 00325 Inadequate Self‐Compassion
Abstract Background Self‐compassion is an essential component of self‐care. Recognizing it as a nursing diagnosis can promote interventions to address Inadequate Self‐Compassion. Aim This study aims to clinically validate the new NANDA‐I diagnosis (00325) Inadequate Self‐Compassion.
Aarón Muñoz‐Devesa +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Oblivious Polynomial Evaluation and Oblivious Neural Learning
We study the problem of Oblivious Polynomial Evaluation (OPE), where one party has a polynomial P & the other party, with an input x, wants to learn P(x) in an oblivious way. Previously existing protocols are based on some intractability assumptions that
Chang, Yan-Cheng
core
The Troubles and Beyond: The impact of a museum exhibit on a post‐conflict society
Abstract In divided societies, can museums contribute to healing and recovery? While efforts to memorialize past violence typically aim to promote tolerance and reconciliation, remembering could exacerbate divisions in recovering societies where the past is deeply contested. We examine a transitional justice museum exhibit in Northern Ireland.
Laia Balcells, Elsa Voytas
wiley +1 more source
Exploring Differential Obliviousness
In a recent paper Chan et al. [SODA '19] proposed a relaxation of the notion of (full) memory obliviousness, which was introduced by Goldreich and Ostrovsky [J. ACM '96] and extensively researched by cryptographers. The new notion, differential obliviousness, requires that any two neighboring inputs exhibit similar memory access patterns, where the ...
Amos Beimel +2 more
openaire +4 more sources
Making Mining Licit: Gold, Commodification, and the Everyday Performance of Law in Colombia
ABSTRACT Ethnographies of resource‐making have shown that the extraction of resource value from objects is premised on obviating the emplaced lifeworlds that surrounded objects before they traveled to consumer markets. Much of this literature looks at such supply‐chain disentanglement from the viewpoint of corporate and formal regulatory practices ...
Jesse Jonkman
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Parents of children who were removed from home are generally under‐researched, and there is a shortage of knowledge concerning their perceptions and experiences, particularly in complex contexts. Using a context‐informed perspective and intersectionality theory, this study aims to better understand the experiences of parents regarding their ...
Mayis Eissa, Anat Zeira
wiley +1 more source

